Kenneth Wilfred Baker, Baron Baker of DorkingCHPC (born 3 November 1934) is a British politician, a former Conservative Member of Parliament and cabinet minister[1] and a life member of the Tory Reform Group.

Education Secretary

Baker served as Secretary of State for Education from 1986 to 1989. His most noted action in his time at the Department of Education was the introduction of the controversial "National Curriculum" through the 1988 Education Act. He also introduced in-service training days for teachers, which became popularly known as "Baker days". At this time Baker was often tipped as a future Conservative leader, including in the 1987 edition of Julian Critchley's biography of Michael Heseltine. Critchley quoted one journalist's witticism "I have seen the future and it smirks" (a reference to the famous line "I have seen the future and it works" written by Lincoln Steffens, an American visitor to Lenin's USSR in 1921). Baker's mannerisms were unpopular with some people: he dressed his hair with Brylcreem, and by the late 1980s he had come to be portrayed by the satirical programme Spitting Image as an slimy slug.[3]

Party Chairman

In the July 1989 reshuffle Baker was appointed Chairman of the Conservative Party, with the intention that he should organise a fourth consecutive General Election victory for Margaret Thatcher. Baker managed to steer the government through the otherwise disastrous local elections of May 1990 by stressing the good results for Conservative "flagship" councils in Westminster and Wandsworth, i.e. supposedly demonstrating that the Poll Tax—a source of great unpopularity for the government—could be a vote-winner for Conservative councils who kept it low. He was still Party Chairman at the time Margaret Thatcher resigned (November 1990).

Home Secretary

After the change of regime Baker was promoted to Home Secretary. His time as Home Secretary was marred by prison riots, and by bad publicity over the introduction of the Dangerous Dogs Act 1991.

After his term of office he was also found (M v Home Office 1994) to have been in contempt of court for having deported a man back to Zaire (in 1991) in breach of an interim injunction and while proceedings were pending. "It would be a black day for the rule of law and the liberty of the subject," the Court of Appeal ruled, "if ministers were not accountable to the courts for their personal actions." This was the first time the courts had reached such a finding against a serving minister for exercise of Prerogative Powers, something previously thought to be impossible.

Personal life

In 2005 he published a book on King George IV, George IV: A Life in Caricature, followed by King George III: A Life in Caricature in 2007;(Thames & Hudson). Other publications include several compilations of poetry,[8][9][10][11] a history of political cartoons and his autobiography.

In the media

Baker was interviewed about the rise of Thatcherism for the 2006 BBC TV documentary series Tory! Tory! Tory!. Singer-songwriter Bill Pritchard criticized Baker from the left in his 1989 pop song "Kenneth Baker." The lyrics include a litany of names, in which Baker, as well as Thatcher and several other world figures from that period are accused of being "a sick man." Kenneth was famously portrayed as a slug in the cult political satire TV show, "Spitting Image".